Kercher murder suspects arrive in court for final hearing
Meredith Kercher murder suspects Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito arrived in court today for the final hearing in their trial before the jury retires to deliberate its verdict.
American Knox (aged 22) from Seattle, and her Italian former lover Sollecito (aged 25) are accused by prosecutors of killing the Leeds University student in Perugia, Italy, after what allegedly started as an extreme sex game.
As the end of the long trial approached, Knoxâs sister, Deanna Knox, said she was nervous about the outcome and had spent a sleepless night.
She said: âThe time is going to go by so slowly after we leave here today and the wait is going to be awful but from what Iâve seen of the jury I wouldnât think it will be really, really long.
âI know theyâre going to take their time and really, really think about it but it has been a year long and I think they pretty much know whatâs going on by now so hopefully it comes out our way.
âIâve got all my hopes in it and all I want to do is take her home so Iâve got a good feeling about it. Iâm still nervous, but good feeling.â
Knoxâs father, Curt Knox, said too that he was hopeful.
âI believe in her innocence,â he said. âI believe our attorneys have more than presented evidence that would show that sheâs innocent.
âThe judge and the jury have a big task ahead of them. Theyâve got two kidsâ life in their hands.â
The semi-naked body of Miss Kercher (aged 21) from Coulsdon, Surrey, England was found in a pool of blood with her throat slit in her room in Perugia in November 2007.
She had been sharing a house with Knox, who was also a student, on her year abroad in the Umbrian hilltop town.
Prosecutors say that Sollecito held her down while Knox stabbed her to death.
Miss Kercherâs family is due to arrive in Perugia today in time for a verdict, which is expected to be delivered today or tomorrow.
A third person, Rudy Guede (aged 22) from the Ivory Coast, has already been convicted of the murder and sexual violence and sentenced to 30 years in jail.
But prosecutors say he was only one of three killers who acted together, under âthe fumes of drugs and possibly alcoholâ.
Knox addressed the court in Perugia, Italy, yesterday in a voice trembling with emotion.
Fighting back tears, she told the eight jurors in Italian that she did not want to be branded an assassin.
However, she showed no anger towards the prosecutors who have requested a life sentence for her.
She said: âThey are trying to do their job, even if they canât understand.â
Knox, who has been behind bars for two years, told the court people often asked her how she managed to stay so calm.
She said: âThe first thing to say is that I am not calm. I am afraid of being defined as something I am not and by actions that are not mine.
âIâm afraid of having the mask of a murderer forced on to my skin.â
She said she was âconfused, sad, frustratedâ about being kept in jail for two years.
But she remained âconfident and certain in what I know,â she said.
She had tried, she added, to find the positive side of the situation.
âI donât get depressed,â she said. âIn these situations, I grieve and try to find the positives in important moments.â
Sollecito also addressed the court yesterday, saying that no motive had emerged for his alleged role in the murder.
He said: âI am not violent, I never have been. I wasnât at the house (where Miss Kercher lived and died) that night.â
But prosecutor Manuela Comodi argued that âwe live in an age of violence with no motiveâ.
She often asked herself why Knox and Sollecito murdered Miss Kercher, she said, but suggested that the reason was a mystery.
âWe donât know what sparks these things,â she said.
She cited DNA evidence allegedly linking Sollecito to the crime and wrapped a white bra around a microphone in the courtroom to demonstrate how his DNA could have ended up on Miss Kercherâs bra strap and not on the rest of the bra.
Knoxâs mother, Edda Mellas, vowed the family would continue to battle for her daughterâs freedom if she was convicted.
âIf she is found guilty we will carry on fighting,â she said.




